| Overnight
Sorting in Kentucky
When University
of Kentucky Extension Swine Specialist
Gary Parker heard about automatic
sorting technology, he saw a possible
solution to a costly problem: SORT
LOSS. Parker knew that many producers
in his area routinely missed the
best packer prices because the hogs
they shipped didn't match desired
weight ranges. He was also aware
that many producers had a hard time
determining when to begin shipping
pigs hoping to wait long enough
for a critical mass of heavy pigs
but before the big guys crashed
packers' upper weight limits or
started squeezing space from smaller
pigs. Furthermore, manual sorting
was a huge hassle for producers
and their employees.
One producer wrestling
with sorting problems was Jerry
O'Bryan of Owensboro, KY. He says
his packer wants pigs between 235
and 275 pounds. Hand sorting to
that degree of accuracy requires
O'Bryan or one of his 15 employees
to finesse specific animals. "That's
an unpleasant job, even dangerous,"
says O'Bryan. "We've had people
hurt because an animal turned too
quickly and knocked them down."
In mid-2001, O'Bryan
enlisted Parker's help to incorporate
automatic sorting in two, 960-head
barns at O'Bryan's Iron Maiden Farms.
The barns are divided into two super
large pens, each containing 480
pigs. O'Bryan installed one automatic
sorting scale in each barn. The
gating is arranged so that pigs
from one end of the barn are sorted
into a holding pen at one time.
Then O'Bryan and his crew position
the gates to sort pigs from the
other pen the next day.
Parker helped
O'Bryan work out the management
logistics of the new barns and is
keeping track of the performance.
So far only two feeding groups have
gone through the barns and due to
technical problems in the feed mill,
only limited data is available.
But Parker and O'Bryan agree the
system is working well. "All the
benefits that we read about no social
order, better use of the pens, less
sorting labor have come true," says
Parker. Growth rates and feed efficiency
appear to be about equal to other
barns in O'Bryan's system. O'Bryan
is now considering installing sorting
technology in additional barns.
Accurate Sorting
in Less Time
Sorting is definitely more accurate
and less hassle than in traditional
barns, according to O'Bryan. "There's
less stress on animals and less
stress on people," he says. "Any
time you make a job easier, you
can do a better job." Sort loss
runs about $.50 per head in the
automatic sorting facilities compared
to $1.50 in other barns, according
to O'Bryan, who prefers to market
animals in the 265-270 lbs range.
Because O'Bryan
uses one scale for both sides of
the barn, he admits there is some
time involved in setting up the
barn for training and sorting the
two pens. About six weeks before
marketing begins, O'Bryan begins
training by allowing pigs to walk
through the scale on their way to
the food courts. Each side of the
barn has access to the scale on
alternate weeks. With only one scale,
"it takes some time to set up the
gates so the pigs can get the experience
of walking through the scale," says
O'Bryan.
To prepare for
marketing, O'Bryan moves the gating
to create a holding pen for the
number of pigs he wants to ship.
He punches in a minimum weight on
the scale's indicator keypad and
then lets the scale do the rest
overnight. "You can set your parameters
on Sunday and by Monday morning,
you'll have 100-120 pigs in the
holding pen and ready to load onto
the truck," explains Parker
Pigs Move Easier
Parker says truckers who haul O'Bryan's
pigs say they love the automatic
sorting barns because pigs load
onto trucks easier at the farm,
and at the packing plant they unload
in about half the time as pigs from
traditional barns. Parker believes
the animals in automatic sorting
facilities move better and are less
prone to foot and leg problems.
"We see less foot lesions, less
concrete sores and pigs tend to
get up and move more," says Parker.
"There's more room for pigs to lay
and less piling and walking on top
of each other."
Automatic sorting
scales also provide a tool for determining
when to begin marketing pigs. As
mentioned earlier, producers tend
to wait to sort so they can market
as many heavy pigs as possible.
But waiting brings the risk of getting
docked for overweight pigs. Crowding
is also a concern, according to
Parker. "By having automatic sorting,
you can go ahead and sort earlier
and start getting those heavy pigs
out sooner. That gives the other
pigs in the barn more space," he
says.

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